I accumulated a good amount of gear with that characteristic Pantone 123 as I was building up my home electronics bench. Most of it had since been sold.
Model | Notes |
---|---|
Fluke 287 | Bought at a good price to see if I could use its graphical logging functionality in place of a scope. It did not fit my needs and I ended up not liking the long startup times. |
Fluke 566 IR Meter | Accepts a thermocouple input. Has a neat pixel-based LCD display, like the 287/289. |
Fluke i410 Current Clamp | Can measure AC and DC current, up to 400A. |
Fluke 376 Clamp Meter | Bought for non-contact measurement of espresso machine current. Can measure AC and DC current. Ended up selling it and using the i410 when I need to use a clamp. |
Fluke 62+ Max | Useful for general non-contact temperature probing. I use it to verify my espresso machine boiler temperature and sometimes for steaks. |
Fluke 192 Scopemeter | Bought at a good price so that I could have differential scope channels with fully isolated grounds. Unfortunately there is a known problem with the LCD zebra strip contacts not making sufficient contact with the PCB contacts. |
Fluke 187 | Discontinued. I'd say this is the most fully-featured Fluke that does not take any extra startup time (e.g 287/289). This serves as my main multimeter. |
Fluke 77IV | Average sensing, not RMS |